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Haven Kimmel is the author of the bestselling memoir A Girl Named Zippy, and its sequel, She Got Up Off the Couch. Her novels include The Solace of Leaving Early and Something Rising (Light and Swift), and she is the author of the children's book, Orville: A Dog Story. Her next novel, The Used World, will be published in September 2007. So much has been written, said, and expectorated about the memoir genre in the past five years there remains little to say. And it's true, the memoirs worth reading are rare--the ones that jolt or enlighten or delight with craft. Sarah Thyer's Dark At The Roots is a stand-out for countless reasons. Her sentences compel like electricity: the reader moves from one to the next as if being shocked, but pleasantly, or with the pathological love of the tongue for the toothache. Thank God I have this toothache, you think, because otherwise my life would be a pit of stupid. Her dialogue is dead-on (and having lived in both Mississippi and Louisiana I can tell you it isn't easy to replicate and virtually everyone gets it wrong). She is shameless and unembarassable and she makes a foreign world so concrete you can feel the shag carpeting and smell the extinct shampoo. Thyer handles a shadowy relationship with her father with a grace that both reveals and conceals, simultaneously. Most of all, from beginning to end she remains as consistent a character as one looks for in fiction: she is the best friend you wish you'd had, and the girl your mother warned you about (as if those two things don't always go hand in hand). My own sister recently said to me, as we were having a swinging contest at the park--I am 41 and she is 51--"I swing higher, I'm smarter and funnier than you, and people like me better." I can think of no better description for Sarah Thyer, or for her memoir, which was crafted with an edge razor-fine. She's gifted enough to write anything: fiction, another memoir, pamphlets about the dangers of hitting electric lines with your Rototiller. I can't wait for whatever comes next. --Haven Kimmel
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I DEMAND A SEQUEL!,
By
This review is from: Dark at the Roots: A Memoir (Hardcover)
I finished reading this lovely tome set in my illustrious home state of Louisiana last night and sat straight up in bed and shouted, "I DEMAND A SEQUEL!" As it was 2 a.m., my husband sat straight up in bed, too, and said "WTF?" Even the dog barked! LOL!
This is one of THE best memoirs I've read in years. Sarah Thyre is a born comedian and a fantastic writer. She captures the essence of the Coonass culture and the hidden joys of a dysFUNctional Louisiana childhood like no one else I've ever read. (I was born in south Louisiana and have lived here most of my life, so I know a good story when I read one.) Ahem... My only regret was that she ended the book too soon. I'm dying to know what happened to her after high school (and the convenience store job so deliciously described) and if she really did go to LSU. So, Sarah, if you read this, please, please, please consider a sequel to this hilarious, touching, bittersweet story of your childhood. I think it deserves ten stars after some of the dry, boring memoirs I've recently read. Buy this book if you need a good laugh and a summer read that you won't soon forget.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Title says it all.,
By
This review is from: Dark at the Roots: A Memoir (Hardcover)
Sarah Thyre was born hungry--for food, for love, for laughter and most of all, for attention. Scatalogical, scattered, raunchy and hilarious, the book took a bit to win me over because of our narrator. She was the kind of kid that drove me crazy--pushing this much too far, too hard, never backing up, always in your face. The book is the same way. But by the book's end, her awareness of just how whack her family was and her constant efforts to mask and blend in with the regular folks really touched me. Excellent portrayals of her parents, her mother's eyes "glittering with Munchausen's," her father's complete inability to connect with his kids other than the occasional blow to the head. Hey, she made it through and I admire her for that. I do have to complain about the ending, though; it just stops.
If you enjoy this book, you might just love this novel: Colors insulting to Nature, by Cintra Wilson. I did!
11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Loved the memories!,
By SSA Girl (Louisiana) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dark at the Roots: A Memoir (Hardcover)
Anyone born in the late 60's or early 70's is going to catch all the hysterical references to our own childhoods. Sarah Thyre was able to put into words the feelings/attitudes of those crazy years, especially in the later chapters. From describing her old beat up "Gremlin", the music, the clothes, even her beloved copy of "The Preppy Handbook". I loved "Dark at the Roots", and look forward to more tales from this author.
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